To link to the entire object, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed the entire object, paste this HTML in websiteTo link to this page, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed this page, paste this HTML in website

rio Files andidacy etitions
omlinson, McColloch, Ward to Seek ASSC Posts in May Election
Da
i
an
Vol. XLII
Los Angeles, Calif., Tuesday, April 24, 1951
No. 115
iree candidates have of-ially fiied petitions for SC ^offices, it was an-mced yesterday, he three office-seekers Stan Tomlinson, who is lining for senior-class pres-nt; Tony Ward, senator-large; and Bill McColloch, sident of the School of sic.
omlinson is the only one of the ee who had announced his can-cy prior to filing a petition, ard and Tomlinson are cur-
eUtion for all ASSC offices available In 225 SU. Dead-for filing is Monday at 3 p.m.
Music at Noon Will Feature Opera Program
Potential opera stars among School of Music students will have an opportunity to test their talents before a live audience tomorrow in the Music at Noon program at 12:15 in Hancock auditorium.
Under the direction of Mr. and Mrs. Mario Chamlee of the voice department, the program represents the first hearing of the work of their standard opera repertoire class.
Eleven singers will appear in solo
parts from various operas. Pianist Clyde Lehmann will accompany them.
Participants i n c 1 u a e sopranos Marjorie Low, Grace Schwennesen, fe announced their candidacy and Rhea Underwood; coloratura offices, they have not yet filed; soprano Alma Piazza; and contralto ,ir petitions. J Donna Namisnack.
one of the candidates has ex- j Singing male roles will be bari-ised affiliation with any campus tones Sterling Ebel, Gordon Ewing, [ty or group. Ward and Tomlin-1 and Arthur Tookoian; tenor Earl were elected to the Senate on Conklin; and bass Marvin Hayes. Greater University Partk ticket j wmiam Moorehead *m join
Conklin and the Misses Piazza and Namisnack in the quartet from “Ri-goletto” to conclude the performance.
Premiere of Two Modern Operas Slated for Bovard
ly members of the Senate d, a Lambda Chi Alpha, is Ident of the sophomore class, jle Tomlinson, Beta Theta Pi, is a senator-at-large.
IcColloch. an Acacia, is vice-sident of the School of Music, these three are the only ones have as yet filed official peti-5 for the ASSC elections next :ith. Althougih several persons
WOLFGANG MARTIN . . . conductor
nity Seeks residential .andidates
Trojan Chest Plans Last Try
For $10,000
CJnity party is still waiting for neone to file for ASSC president the Unity ticket, Nominations airman Art Wexler announced iterday.
*»dlinetar film* petitions as a Tn)jan chMt d|rKtors hav< ,,e. aty candidal* lor the topjrtu-.^ make , flnal e(tort w nt body post is 3 pjn. today, sxler said.
pandidates seeking Unity back-should appear before the nom-jAing oommittee this afternoon 402 Student Union, he empha-bed, saying that Unity endorse- . .
Ent of a presidential candidate Uons wl11 * made Wlto aU organ1' H1 be announced later in the rations and facult? that dld not
1 reach the $10,000 goal of the drive.
Since total collections amounted | to only $7000. plans have been made for intensive appeals to all previous non-contributors.
| Follow-up contacts for contribu-
Mk
j contribute, said Chairman Joe
Petitions of candidates seeking v>einman‘ F-u'thermore, a plan for lity backing for other offices will a Pled«e s>'st*m ** bemK u'orked accepted every afternoon until |out-lidav, Wexler said. Interviews of Only 40 of 150 faculty mem fese petitioners are scheduled 1)61-5 answered the letters which fly between 12 and 3 p.m. in 402 were *®t out to them with con k tributions for the chest, although
the completed Unity slate will be many °* them may have given dur [eased Monday, Wexler said. ing the classroom collection earned the prospect for receiving paign. Reminders will be sent at idential petitions by this after- the end of the month when pay n. Party Chairman Lillian Ste- checks come out to all those who s was confident. are not listed as having contrib
e’re quite sure we'll have at uted. t two petitioners for Unity Chest workers will remind cam-
Coed Named Alum Hostess
Jane Stabler, third-generation coed, was chosen as the official hostess to welcome several thousand SC alumni on Alumni day May 5.
She will assist in the women's program which will include a fashion show, a cooking class in Bovard auditorium at 10 a.m., and other general events.
Miss Stabler will also participate in the barbecue luncheon on Bovard field which will be presided over by Dr. Francis J. Conley, president of the General Alumni association.
The appointment of the brown -eyed senior from the School of Music was announced by Virgil Pinkley, general chairman of the daq.
She is a member of Alpha Chi Omega and claims her third - generation title through her father who was graduated from SC in 1916 and from her grandfather, Laird J. Stabler, who came to SC in 1895 and later served as Dean of the School of Pharmacy.
'ing." she said, he nominations committee cents of M. S. Malik, Bill Kennedy, salie Bottorf, Elva Soper, xler.
pus organizations that there is still a great need for chest funds. Out of 150 letters that were sent to or-and ganizations, only three met with i any response.
avalry-Backed Reds our Through UN Lines
KYO, Tuesday. Apr. 24—(UP) nese army corps and five to seven Chinese Communist division North Korean divisions were thrown rted by cavalry poured into the initial attack. That rough a break in the center of means between 180.000 and 200,000 Allied line Monday, braving a Chinese and 50,000 North Koreans of air and artillery fire to Another 200,000 to 300,000 Comash southward toward the 38th munists. largely Chinese, were Hel. available to Red army commanders
United Press Correspondentj for immediate use to follow up the therford Poats reported from1 opening blows of the attack, hth army headquarters that thej Behind the attacking and reserve had thrown up to 250,000 forces, the Reds were believed to s into v the initial thrust of have enough troops to make up a ir spring offensive. He said total 700,000-man offensive force sent United Nations lines The Reds poured over the ridges g back to the vicinity of the and down the valleys toward the parauei almost e\ eryu here parallel despite a butchering of n»s the 95-mile fighting front, their ranks by Allied planes and‘; icomplete tabulations indicated fast-firing Allied artillery, includ-i ver, that the offensive cost big 155-millimeter “long Toms" ' «hoir
Reds a phenominal 18.000 to and 240-millimeter i8-inch> how- sh U’ G€n‘ °mar N- Bradley, chair-000 casualties in its first two ltaers * h° man of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
PS. and the chiefs themselves. One ob-
Offensive Broke Sundav T° the east of the break‘ ject will be to find out whether
lied lines had been 8 to 12 or Allied tro°Ps held against they ever agreed with MacArthur's
miles north of the border Sun- attacks ln the Hwachon area Pacific strategy and were overruled.
night when the (3h*nese ®Ut °n th* *** attacks by CH Meantime, the debate over Mac-i nese divisions drove UN forces Arthur'* nnstor rnntinued un-
offensive long-awaited,back across the Hantan river. 1 °USter continUed un
most serious Red break- Fal1 Back 111 West
ugh appeared to be in the cen i Further west. United Press cor-the Allied lines south of respondent William Chapman* re-
May Quiz Ike On Mac Policy
WASHINGTON, Apr. 23—(UP)— Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D.-Minn.) said today “it may be necessary” to bring Gen. Dwight D Eisenhower baok from Europe to testify in the Truman-MacArthur fight over military-diplomatic policies in the Far East.
But, he added, he hopes such ac tion will not be necessary because Eisenhower has “a big enough job” in building Europe's defense “without being involved in a partisan debate.” It was the first suggestion that Eisenhower might be projected into the bitter dispute.
Chairman Richard B. Russell (D.-Ga.), of the combined Senate Armed Services and Foreign Relations commitees. said it is “possible” that Eisenhower may testify, although he has no present plans to call the Atlantic Pact commander.
The two committees are scheduled to open a full-dress investigation next week of the events wihich led to Gen. Douglas MacArthur’s dismissal by President Truman. The five-star general has been invited to be his own chief witness.
Others slated to testify include Defense Secretary George C. Mar
One-Act Productions
In English Will Have
All-Student Casts
Bovard stage will be the setting for a world, and a west coast premiere of two modern operas Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday, May 2, 4, and 5:
Under the guidance of Dr. Carl Ebert, Opera Workshop director, an all-student cast will appear in the world premiere of “Dark Waters ’ by Ernst Krenek, and a west coast premiere of “The Real Princess” by Ernst Toch. Dr. Ebert has just returned from Milan, Italy, where he directed productions at famed La Scala opera house.
Both are one-act productions in English. Famed conductor Wolfgang Martin will direct the orchestra.
Moody Mystery
“Dark Waters” is a very modem composition. It is the story of a young river-barge hand who decides he’ll make some fast money by fencing stolen goods.
A strange girl, who appears out of nowhere and seems to each member of the cast to have a different personality, adds to the rising tide of suspense which engulfs the moody opera mystery.
The opera takes place among a whirling current of murky wraters which, according to Conductor Martin, sets the mood for the weirdly beautiful composition.
Light Comedy Toch’s “The Real Princess” is in direct contrast to Krenek’s intense production. It is a light comedy based on an old fairy-tale about a queen who sets up a spectacular test in order to determine whether her son's bride-to-be possesses the necessary qualification—blood of the bluest blue.
A pea under seven feather mattresses is the equipment decided upon by the queen to test her future daughter-in-law. The unusual technique requires that the girl get black and blue after a sleepless night upon the pea and the mul-tiple-mattressed bed. If this happens. the aspiring princess has shown the true sensitivity which marks an extremely nofole heritage.
Pompous Comic The action is further highlighted by the comic antics of a pompous chancellor and a rather featherbrained nurse.
Many tinkling melodies and pretty arias dot the score of the lyrical Toch composition, which is again in direct contrast to the qualities of the Krenek opera.
Sets ^for the two productions were designed by Marcus Fuller.
Second balcony seats are reserved for student Activity book holders. Reserved seats for opening night are $3. $2.40, $1.80, and $1.20. Tabs for Friday and Saturday are $2.40, $1.80,' and $1.20.
Tickets are available at the university ticket office.
CARL EBERT . . . director
IFC to Study Eligibility Rules For Athletes
DT Acclaimed All-American'
Deadline Set For ’Tellers'
Tomorrow is the last day to apply for positions on the yell squad, announced yell king John Chapman yesterday. Petitions are due at 5 in the Knight office, 232 Student Union.
To qualify as yell assistants, applicants must attend four out of five meetings of the new yell school. These meetings will be held from 7-9 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday and May 1, 2, and 3.
The yell school idea was recently incorporated into the ASSC constitution as an amendment to the yell leading by-law. It is to improve the caliber of yell leaders and qualify them for try-outs. Further information will be posted on the Knight bulletin board.
Controversy over the question of whether houses on the Row have been using ineligible athletes in IF competition should be settled today when the IFC Athletic committee holds an open meeting to hear all the arguments and draw up recommendations for inter - fraternity athletic standards.
The meeting is scheduled for 3:15 p.m., 418 SU.
The question was brought up at the recent IFC meeting when Phi Psi was accused of using an ineligible athlete in a volleyball game. This is the meeting which Daily Trojan reporters were asked to leave.
David Small, chairman of the IFC Athletic committee, ingesti gated the situation and reported yesterday that he had uncovered information which “indicates that virtually all of the houses on the Row have used ineligible men in one or more sports.”
To be eligible, a man must be listed on Coordinator Riohard Berg’s master list of fraternity men.
Small said that the purpose of the meeting would be to bring out into the open all of the discrepancies he discovered and then to attempt to set up a code which will more completely define the eligibility of men participating in interfratemity athletics. These standards will be posed ln the form of a recommendation to the IFC.
Small did not know if any punishment would be sought for errant fraternities.
Another All-American rating for newspaper excellence came to the Daily Trojan yesterday.
The Associated Collegiate Press informed the DT that it placed among the 10 top college papers in the United States in its semi-annual competition.
The rating was given the fall, j-——
1950 editions of the paper, and is' the highest rating offered.
The award marks a continuation of a DT tradition of more than a decade.
The paper was scored “excellent”! for coverage, balance, vitality, and; creativeness in news stories.
Praise was also given for organization, style, and features.
“Excellent” ratings went also to Twelve finalists in the “Air headlines and makeup. ; Queen” contest will be introduced
AROTC Picks
Finalists for Queen Contest
The editions of the paper were today at noon to 500 AROTC men judged in comparison with other on drill field in the Coliseum, college dailies. One of these coeds will be crowned
Staff does excellent job of se- queen at a dance ^Se-
lecting copy for issues,” a grader Finalists are Barbara Jean Cham-commented in the association's re- l3ers’ DeIta Gamma; Mary Ander-port, son, Alpha Gamma Delta; Dionne
Wiseheart; Gayle Pinrose, Delta Gamma; Gerry Allen, Alpha Delta ... . , , Pi; JoAnn Bowles. Delta Gamma;
The editoria. page and the sports Teresa Lawson, Delta Gamma; Dor-page were both given top rating oth Hlckox ^ ^ tor coverage, treatment, writing, PergusoIli ^ ^
811 P ay* Randy Allen, Alpha Omicron Pi;
‘A superior improvement over \fara Lee Walter, Pi Beta Phi; and the last 10 years” was noted by Barbara Bates, Kappa Kappa Gam-the association in all college pa- ma_ pers, the report said.
“Your colorful, brief leads fine” was another comment.
Democrat Gets Vandenberg Seat
LANSING, Mich., Apr. 23—(UP) —Blair Moody, veteran newspaperman whose early career closely
“All applicants are urged, to at- „ , ^ .. . , 4 0 tend the first meeting, said Chap-!paralleled that of the late ^ Ar* man. “We may have yell kings Ll>ur H- Vandenberg, today was ap-from other schools as guests to give‘pointed to fulfill Vandenberg's un-new ideas.” j expired term.
Phi Taus Pick Nancy Pryor As Girl to Go Steady With'
32 Interviewed
Chosen on the basis of dress, poise, personality, and looks, the women appeared before seven judges for an informal interview. Altogether 32 women were interviewed.
None of the men who selected jthe finalists knew that they were going to be judges until yesterday afternoon. They were asked to at-;tend a meeting and were then told of their selection as judges.
A possible 100 points could be earned by contestants. Twenty-five points were given each for drees and poise, while 50 points were awarded for icoks and personality combined. No names or affiliations were mentioned in the judging. Date dresses and heels were worn.
Get Honorary Ranks Besides receiving the title of queen, the winner will also be made an
U. S. Greater Threat Than Russ—Bevan
LONDON, Apr. 23—(UP)—Aneu-rin Bevan, leader of a left wing revolt that threatens to wreck Brittain’s Labor government, said today that the American rearmament program is a greater threat to the world than Russian aggression.
Assuming leadership of a leftist Labor bloc which can throw the government out of office at any time by refusing to vote or joining the Conservatives in a vote against
it, Bevan called for Britain to make honorary colonel. Pour honorary itself a “third force ’ in world poll- lieutenants wiil also be chosen. Bal-^cs* loting will take place tomorrow and
The “third force” would side with Thursday. Results will be announc-
neither the United States nor Russia, but would pursue its own program of “democratic Socialism.”
Following Bevan’s example, President of the Board of Trade Harold Wilson, a second anchor man in the cabinet, resigned this morning, and it was reported that Colonial Undersecretary Tom Cox would be next.
It was reported tonight that John Freeman, parliamentary
ed at the dance, which is scheduled for Deauville Beach club, Santa Monica.
AECMayTest New H-Bomb
Nancy Pryor, Alpha Gamma Delta, was picked ‘The ‘Girl We'd Most Like to Gp Steady With” by Phi Kappa Tau fraternity at their annual “Our Girl” formal dance last Saturday night.
After Miss Pryor’s selections from among the women attending, her escort Tom Watson decided to change her newly awarded title to ‘The Girl I’d Most Like to Go
Steady With,” after which they announced their pinning.
A trophy was given Miss Pryor and her name will be inscribed on a second trophy which rotates among the winning sorority houses.
Other women selected in the last two years are Elaine Best, who is now married to a Phi Kappa Tau, and Mavis Shames, who is engaged to one. Both are members of Alpha Delta Pi.
HONG KONG. Apr. 23— (UP)— secretary Sen. Warren G. Magnuson (D-Wash) to the Ministry of Supply, also had today said the Atoms; Energy corn-quit. mission will carry out an “expert-
The government won tonight, by ment of a military nature” on Kwa-297 to 293, the first Commons vote jalein atoll in the Pacific within since the revolt started. It came on the next few days, a Conservative motion to cancel in- Magnuson refused to disclose the creased fares which the govern- exact date and nature of the “ex-ment proposed on its nationalized periment,” but said he would go to railroads to pay for wage increases. Kwajalein, after a three-day visit As was expected, Bevan and other' here, to witness it. leftists voted for the government. It was assumed, from the way It is expected that the leftists Magnuson, talked, that the experi-may vote against the government fent involved a test of a new atomic
tomorrow night on a bill to charge people half the cost of false teeth
weapon.
(Magnuson’s statement
revived
iwa. where the fanatical Reds themselves in the path of Allied artillery in a hu-sea to exploit a weak spot found in the line. Defying Al-guns and planes that slaugh-d thousands of them, the eneared to have rammed a
ported that another UN unit fell back nearly 12 miles south, of Chorwon, 18 miles north of the
abated.
In Worcester, Mass., House Republican Leader Joseph W. Martin Jr., Massachusetts, said that public ‘•wrath” over MacArthur's dismissal will “double in its fury” if the administration tries to “smear” the
parallel. Allied spearheads had general.
reached to within a few miles of the defense bastion last week.
On the western flank, close-quarters battle raged with small 8 to 19 miles into Allied arms, automatic weapons and hand to a point east-northeast of grenades. The Reds smashed gong, just a mile inside North across the Injin river near Kor-
angpo, just soujh of the parallel, compilation of front reports during the day yesterday. But ac-th Army headquarters in- tion decreased there during the that elements of seven Chi-!night.
Simultaneously, the Veterans of Foreign Wars called on President Truman to fire Secretary of State Dean Acheson and replace him with a man who can “pave the way for a rebirth obf our bipartisan foreign policy.”
VFW Commander -in - Chief Charles S. Ralls said Acheson has lost the support of the people and has “created only disunity.”
Hale Judges Give Verdicts
Nerves jangled and voices rose in a suspense-filled semi-final round of the Hale Court competition last night in the School of Law auditorium.
Winners of the two-hour semifinals were Bill Dettmar of Santa Monica, UCLA graduate, and Kenneth Lewis, University of Redlands graduate.
“The judges complimented the four attorneys and gave constructive comments that any law student would appreciate,” said Bill Jekel, chairman of the Hale* Court competition.
The decisions wrere handed down by presiding jurist Emett Wilson associate justice of the District Court of Appeal, and Joseph W Vickers and Elsworth Meyers, judges of the Superior Court of Los Angeles county.
The questioning of the black robed judges and replies of quick witted lawyers gave the small audi ence a sampling of the real-life drama enacted in a courtroom.
Tomorrow night Don Mitchel University of Michigan graduate will argue for the plantiff and de fending will be Fred Nicholas, SC School of Journalism, graduate Also on the agenda are Gene Glu-shon, UCLA graduate, and Jerry Pastor, graduate of Ohio State college.
and eye-glasses they get under the speculation in Washington that the National Health plan. But the Con- U. S. may be ready to test a hydro-servatives like this and are ex- gen bomb. It has been 15 months pected to vote for the government, since President Truman announced Bevan bitterly attacked the Unit- the H-bomb project, ed States in a House of Commons1 (The Atomic Energy commission, speech explaining his resignation which last month said that a “ma-as Labor Minister which exploded jor> test program is being carried the long-smouldering leftist rebel- out at Eniwetok, refused to co<-lion against the dominant right ment on Magnuson’s statement. In wing in the Labor government. addition to the H-bomb speculation. He accused the United States of there also have been predictions unsettling world economy, encour- that the tests will speed develop-aging inflation, and grabbing all ment of streamlined A-bombs small essential raw materials while urg- j enough to be carried by carrier-
ing its allies to rearm.
based planes and fighter-bombers.)
Public Relations Experts' Meeting Set for Hancock
Public relations experts from all I borg, vice-president of the Bank of parts of the country will meet in | America, San Francisco, speaking Hancock auditorium Thursday to on “Community Relations Under tackle the problem of “Public Re-! Mobilization”; and Caroline Hood.
LOVELY NANCY PRYOR is shown here happily displaying a trophy and bouquet presented by Phi Kappa Tau fraternity for being "The Girl We'd Most Like to Go Steady With." Phi Tau Tom Watson, believing the fraternity should be as good as its word, announced his pinning to Miss Pryor following the presentation ceremonies.
lations During National Mobilization.”
The occasion is the second annual public relations conference, the morning and afternoon sessions of which will be free to faculty and students on presentation of identification cards.
Major Speakers
There will be five major speakers, who have been purposely selected from difefrent areas of the U.S., and who will use the “case-history” method to set forth various public relations problems and their projected solutions.
Principal speakers in the morning session, from 9 to 11:50, will be Milton Fairman, director of public relations of the Borden company. New York, who will speak on “New Jobs for Public Relations in a Period of Mobilization”; and Adam S. Bennion, vice - president of the Utah Light and Power company, Salt Lake City, who will speak on “Internal Communications in a Period of Mobilization.”
Afternoon Feature
director of public relations, Rockefeller Center Inc., New York, speaking on “Promotional Tools for the New Job.”
Each of the speakers will be supplemented by a panel of local experts, and a question-and- answer period will follow each talk. Dr. John M. Pfiffner, professor of public administration, and Dr. Floyd B. Ruch, professor of psychology, will serve on two of these panels.
Main Speaker Main speaker of the day will be W. Howard Chase, director of public relations, General Foods corporation, New York, on leave as assistant to Charles E Wilson, Office of Defense Mobilization, who will speak at the luncheon session ot the conference.
The luncheon session is open only to those who paid the $8 fee, which entitles admission to morning, afternoon, and luncheon sessions. Reservations for this plan are no longer available.
The coference is being sponsored by the Los Angeles Chamber of
The afternoon session, from 2 to; Commerce, the Public Relations 4; 45, will feature Louis B. Lund-j Society of America, and SC,

rio Files andidacy etitions
omlinson, McColloch, Ward to Seek ASSC Posts in May Election
Da
i
an
Vol. XLII
Los Angeles, Calif., Tuesday, April 24, 1951
No. 115
iree candidates have of-ially fiied petitions for SC ^offices, it was an-mced yesterday, he three office-seekers Stan Tomlinson, who is lining for senior-class pres-nt; Tony Ward, senator-large; and Bill McColloch, sident of the School of sic.
omlinson is the only one of the ee who had announced his can-cy prior to filing a petition, ard and Tomlinson are cur-
eUtion for all ASSC offices available In 225 SU. Dead-for filing is Monday at 3 p.m.
Music at Noon Will Feature Opera Program
Potential opera stars among School of Music students will have an opportunity to test their talents before a live audience tomorrow in the Music at Noon program at 12:15 in Hancock auditorium.
Under the direction of Mr. and Mrs. Mario Chamlee of the voice department, the program represents the first hearing of the work of their standard opera repertoire class.
Eleven singers will appear in solo
parts from various operas. Pianist Clyde Lehmann will accompany them.
Participants i n c 1 u a e sopranos Marjorie Low, Grace Schwennesen, fe announced their candidacy and Rhea Underwood; coloratura offices, they have not yet filed; soprano Alma Piazza; and contralto ,ir petitions. J Donna Namisnack.
one of the candidates has ex- j Singing male roles will be bari-ised affiliation with any campus tones Sterling Ebel, Gordon Ewing, [ty or group. Ward and Tomlin-1 and Arthur Tookoian; tenor Earl were elected to the Senate on Conklin; and bass Marvin Hayes. Greater University Partk ticket j wmiam Moorehead *m join
Conklin and the Misses Piazza and Namisnack in the quartet from “Ri-goletto” to conclude the performance.
Premiere of Two Modern Operas Slated for Bovard
ly members of the Senate d, a Lambda Chi Alpha, is Ident of the sophomore class, jle Tomlinson, Beta Theta Pi, is a senator-at-large.
IcColloch. an Acacia, is vice-sident of the School of Music, these three are the only ones have as yet filed official peti-5 for the ASSC elections next :ith. Althougih several persons
WOLFGANG MARTIN . . . conductor
nity Seeks residential .andidates
Trojan Chest Plans Last Try
For $10,000
CJnity party is still waiting for neone to file for ASSC president the Unity ticket, Nominations airman Art Wexler announced iterday.
*»dlinetar film* petitions as a Tn)jan chMt d|rKtors hav< ,,e. aty candidal* lor the topjrtu-.^ make , flnal e(tort w nt body post is 3 pjn. today, sxler said.
pandidates seeking Unity back-should appear before the nom-jAing oommittee this afternoon 402 Student Union, he empha-bed, saying that Unity endorse- . .
Ent of a presidential candidate Uons wl11 * made Wlto aU organ1' H1 be announced later in the rations and facult? that dld not
1 reach the $10,000 goal of the drive.
Since total collections amounted | to only $7000. plans have been made for intensive appeals to all previous non-contributors.
| Follow-up contacts for contribu-
Mk
j contribute, said Chairman Joe
Petitions of candidates seeking v>einman‘ F-u'thermore, a plan for lity backing for other offices will a Pled«e s>'st*m ** bemK u'orked accepted every afternoon until |out-lidav, Wexler said. Interviews of Only 40 of 150 faculty mem fese petitioners are scheduled 1)61-5 answered the letters which fly between 12 and 3 p.m. in 402 were *®t out to them with con k tributions for the chest, although
the completed Unity slate will be many °* them may have given dur [eased Monday, Wexler said. ing the classroom collection earned the prospect for receiving paign. Reminders will be sent at idential petitions by this after- the end of the month when pay n. Party Chairman Lillian Ste- checks come out to all those who s was confident. are not listed as having contrib
e’re quite sure we'll have at uted. t two petitioners for Unity Chest workers will remind cam-
Coed Named Alum Hostess
Jane Stabler, third-generation coed, was chosen as the official hostess to welcome several thousand SC alumni on Alumni day May 5.
She will assist in the women's program which will include a fashion show, a cooking class in Bovard auditorium at 10 a.m., and other general events.
Miss Stabler will also participate in the barbecue luncheon on Bovard field which will be presided over by Dr. Francis J. Conley, president of the General Alumni association.
The appointment of the brown -eyed senior from the School of Music was announced by Virgil Pinkley, general chairman of the daq.
She is a member of Alpha Chi Omega and claims her third - generation title through her father who was graduated from SC in 1916 and from her grandfather, Laird J. Stabler, who came to SC in 1895 and later served as Dean of the School of Pharmacy.
'ing." she said, he nominations committee cents of M. S. Malik, Bill Kennedy, salie Bottorf, Elva Soper, xler.
pus organizations that there is still a great need for chest funds. Out of 150 letters that were sent to or-and ganizations, only three met with i any response.
avalry-Backed Reds our Through UN Lines
KYO, Tuesday. Apr. 24—(UP) nese army corps and five to seven Chinese Communist division North Korean divisions were thrown rted by cavalry poured into the initial attack. That rough a break in the center of means between 180.000 and 200,000 Allied line Monday, braving a Chinese and 50,000 North Koreans of air and artillery fire to Another 200,000 to 300,000 Comash southward toward the 38th munists. largely Chinese, were Hel. available to Red army commanders
United Press Correspondentj for immediate use to follow up the therford Poats reported from1 opening blows of the attack, hth army headquarters that thej Behind the attacking and reserve had thrown up to 250,000 forces, the Reds were believed to s into v the initial thrust of have enough troops to make up a ir spring offensive. He said total 700,000-man offensive force sent United Nations lines The Reds poured over the ridges g back to the vicinity of the and down the valleys toward the parauei almost e\ eryu here parallel despite a butchering of n»s the 95-mile fighting front, their ranks by Allied planes and‘; icomplete tabulations indicated fast-firing Allied artillery, includ-i ver, that the offensive cost big 155-millimeter “long Toms" ' «hoir
Reds a phenominal 18.000 to and 240-millimeter i8-inch> how- sh U’ G€n‘ °mar N- Bradley, chair-000 casualties in its first two ltaers * h° man of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
PS. and the chiefs themselves. One ob-
Offensive Broke Sundav T° the east of the break‘ ject will be to find out whether
lied lines had been 8 to 12 or Allied tro°Ps held against they ever agreed with MacArthur's
miles north of the border Sun- attacks ln the Hwachon area Pacific strategy and were overruled.
night when the (3h*nese ®Ut °n th* *** attacks by CH Meantime, the debate over Mac-i nese divisions drove UN forces Arthur'* nnstor rnntinued un-
offensive long-awaited,back across the Hantan river. 1 °USter continUed un
most serious Red break- Fal1 Back 111 West
ugh appeared to be in the cen i Further west. United Press cor-the Allied lines south of respondent William Chapman* re-
May Quiz Ike On Mac Policy
WASHINGTON, Apr. 23—(UP)— Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D.-Minn.) said today “it may be necessary” to bring Gen. Dwight D Eisenhower baok from Europe to testify in the Truman-MacArthur fight over military-diplomatic policies in the Far East.
But, he added, he hopes such ac tion will not be necessary because Eisenhower has “a big enough job” in building Europe's defense “without being involved in a partisan debate.” It was the first suggestion that Eisenhower might be projected into the bitter dispute.
Chairman Richard B. Russell (D.-Ga.), of the combined Senate Armed Services and Foreign Relations commitees. said it is “possible” that Eisenhower may testify, although he has no present plans to call the Atlantic Pact commander.
The two committees are scheduled to open a full-dress investigation next week of the events wihich led to Gen. Douglas MacArthur’s dismissal by President Truman. The five-star general has been invited to be his own chief witness.
Others slated to testify include Defense Secretary George C. Mar
One-Act Productions
In English Will Have
All-Student Casts
Bovard stage will be the setting for a world, and a west coast premiere of two modern operas Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday, May 2, 4, and 5:
Under the guidance of Dr. Carl Ebert, Opera Workshop director, an all-student cast will appear in the world premiere of “Dark Waters ’ by Ernst Krenek, and a west coast premiere of “The Real Princess” by Ernst Toch. Dr. Ebert has just returned from Milan, Italy, where he directed productions at famed La Scala opera house.
Both are one-act productions in English. Famed conductor Wolfgang Martin will direct the orchestra.
Moody Mystery
“Dark Waters” is a very modem composition. It is the story of a young river-barge hand who decides he’ll make some fast money by fencing stolen goods.
A strange girl, who appears out of nowhere and seems to each member of the cast to have a different personality, adds to the rising tide of suspense which engulfs the moody opera mystery.
The opera takes place among a whirling current of murky wraters which, according to Conductor Martin, sets the mood for the weirdly beautiful composition.
Light Comedy Toch’s “The Real Princess” is in direct contrast to Krenek’s intense production. It is a light comedy based on an old fairy-tale about a queen who sets up a spectacular test in order to determine whether her son's bride-to-be possesses the necessary qualification—blood of the bluest blue.
A pea under seven feather mattresses is the equipment decided upon by the queen to test her future daughter-in-law. The unusual technique requires that the girl get black and blue after a sleepless night upon the pea and the mul-tiple-mattressed bed. If this happens. the aspiring princess has shown the true sensitivity which marks an extremely nofole heritage.
Pompous Comic The action is further highlighted by the comic antics of a pompous chancellor and a rather featherbrained nurse.
Many tinkling melodies and pretty arias dot the score of the lyrical Toch composition, which is again in direct contrast to the qualities of the Krenek opera.
Sets ^for the two productions were designed by Marcus Fuller.
Second balcony seats are reserved for student Activity book holders. Reserved seats for opening night are $3. $2.40, $1.80, and $1.20. Tabs for Friday and Saturday are $2.40, $1.80,' and $1.20.
Tickets are available at the university ticket office.
CARL EBERT . . . director
IFC to Study Eligibility Rules For Athletes
DT Acclaimed All-American'
Deadline Set For ’Tellers'
Tomorrow is the last day to apply for positions on the yell squad, announced yell king John Chapman yesterday. Petitions are due at 5 in the Knight office, 232 Student Union.
To qualify as yell assistants, applicants must attend four out of five meetings of the new yell school. These meetings will be held from 7-9 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday and May 1, 2, and 3.
The yell school idea was recently incorporated into the ASSC constitution as an amendment to the yell leading by-law. It is to improve the caliber of yell leaders and qualify them for try-outs. Further information will be posted on the Knight bulletin board.
Controversy over the question of whether houses on the Row have been using ineligible athletes in IF competition should be settled today when the IFC Athletic committee holds an open meeting to hear all the arguments and draw up recommendations for inter - fraternity athletic standards.
The meeting is scheduled for 3:15 p.m., 418 SU.
The question was brought up at the recent IFC meeting when Phi Psi was accused of using an ineligible athlete in a volleyball game. This is the meeting which Daily Trojan reporters were asked to leave.
David Small, chairman of the IFC Athletic committee, ingesti gated the situation and reported yesterday that he had uncovered information which “indicates that virtually all of the houses on the Row have used ineligible men in one or more sports.”
To be eligible, a man must be listed on Coordinator Riohard Berg’s master list of fraternity men.
Small said that the purpose of the meeting would be to bring out into the open all of the discrepancies he discovered and then to attempt to set up a code which will more completely define the eligibility of men participating in interfratemity athletics. These standards will be posed ln the form of a recommendation to the IFC.
Small did not know if any punishment would be sought for errant fraternities.
Another All-American rating for newspaper excellence came to the Daily Trojan yesterday.
The Associated Collegiate Press informed the DT that it placed among the 10 top college papers in the United States in its semi-annual competition.
The rating was given the fall, j-——
1950 editions of the paper, and is' the highest rating offered.
The award marks a continuation of a DT tradition of more than a decade.
The paper was scored “excellent”! for coverage, balance, vitality, and; creativeness in news stories.
Praise was also given for organization, style, and features.
“Excellent” ratings went also to Twelve finalists in the “Air headlines and makeup. ; Queen” contest will be introduced
AROTC Picks
Finalists for Queen Contest
The editions of the paper were today at noon to 500 AROTC men judged in comparison with other on drill field in the Coliseum, college dailies. One of these coeds will be crowned
Staff does excellent job of se- queen at a dance ^Se-
lecting copy for issues,” a grader Finalists are Barbara Jean Cham-commented in the association's re- l3ers’ DeIta Gamma; Mary Ander-port, son, Alpha Gamma Delta; Dionne
Wiseheart; Gayle Pinrose, Delta Gamma; Gerry Allen, Alpha Delta ... . , , Pi; JoAnn Bowles. Delta Gamma;
The editoria. page and the sports Teresa Lawson, Delta Gamma; Dor-page were both given top rating oth Hlckox ^ ^ tor coverage, treatment, writing, PergusoIli ^ ^
811 P ay* Randy Allen, Alpha Omicron Pi;
‘A superior improvement over \fara Lee Walter, Pi Beta Phi; and the last 10 years” was noted by Barbara Bates, Kappa Kappa Gam-the association in all college pa- ma_ pers, the report said.
“Your colorful, brief leads fine” was another comment.
Democrat Gets Vandenberg Seat
LANSING, Mich., Apr. 23—(UP) —Blair Moody, veteran newspaperman whose early career closely
“All applicants are urged, to at- „ , ^ .. . , 4 0 tend the first meeting, said Chap-!paralleled that of the late ^ Ar* man. “We may have yell kings Ll>ur H- Vandenberg, today was ap-from other schools as guests to give‘pointed to fulfill Vandenberg's un-new ideas.” j expired term.
Phi Taus Pick Nancy Pryor As Girl to Go Steady With'
32 Interviewed
Chosen on the basis of dress, poise, personality, and looks, the women appeared before seven judges for an informal interview. Altogether 32 women were interviewed.
None of the men who selected jthe finalists knew that they were going to be judges until yesterday afternoon. They were asked to at-;tend a meeting and were then told of their selection as judges.
A possible 100 points could be earned by contestants. Twenty-five points were given each for drees and poise, while 50 points were awarded for icoks and personality combined. No names or affiliations were mentioned in the judging. Date dresses and heels were worn.
Get Honorary Ranks Besides receiving the title of queen, the winner will also be made an
U. S. Greater Threat Than Russ—Bevan
LONDON, Apr. 23—(UP)—Aneu-rin Bevan, leader of a left wing revolt that threatens to wreck Brittain’s Labor government, said today that the American rearmament program is a greater threat to the world than Russian aggression.
Assuming leadership of a leftist Labor bloc which can throw the government out of office at any time by refusing to vote or joining the Conservatives in a vote against
it, Bevan called for Britain to make honorary colonel. Pour honorary itself a “third force ’ in world poll- lieutenants wiil also be chosen. Bal-^cs* loting will take place tomorrow and
The “third force” would side with Thursday. Results will be announc-
neither the United States nor Russia, but would pursue its own program of “democratic Socialism.”
Following Bevan’s example, President of the Board of Trade Harold Wilson, a second anchor man in the cabinet, resigned this morning, and it was reported that Colonial Undersecretary Tom Cox would be next.
It was reported tonight that John Freeman, parliamentary
ed at the dance, which is scheduled for Deauville Beach club, Santa Monica.
AECMayTest New H-Bomb
Nancy Pryor, Alpha Gamma Delta, was picked ‘The ‘Girl We'd Most Like to Gp Steady With” by Phi Kappa Tau fraternity at their annual “Our Girl” formal dance last Saturday night.
After Miss Pryor’s selections from among the women attending, her escort Tom Watson decided to change her newly awarded title to ‘The Girl I’d Most Like to Go
Steady With,” after which they announced their pinning.
A trophy was given Miss Pryor and her name will be inscribed on a second trophy which rotates among the winning sorority houses.
Other women selected in the last two years are Elaine Best, who is now married to a Phi Kappa Tau, and Mavis Shames, who is engaged to one. Both are members of Alpha Delta Pi.
HONG KONG. Apr. 23— (UP)— secretary Sen. Warren G. Magnuson (D-Wash) to the Ministry of Supply, also had today said the Atoms; Energy corn-quit. mission will carry out an “expert-
The government won tonight, by ment of a military nature” on Kwa-297 to 293, the first Commons vote jalein atoll in the Pacific within since the revolt started. It came on the next few days, a Conservative motion to cancel in- Magnuson refused to disclose the creased fares which the govern- exact date and nature of the “ex-ment proposed on its nationalized periment,” but said he would go to railroads to pay for wage increases. Kwajalein, after a three-day visit As was expected, Bevan and other' here, to witness it. leftists voted for the government. It was assumed, from the way It is expected that the leftists Magnuson, talked, that the experi-may vote against the government fent involved a test of a new atomic
tomorrow night on a bill to charge people half the cost of false teeth
weapon.
(Magnuson’s statement
revived
iwa. where the fanatical Reds themselves in the path of Allied artillery in a hu-sea to exploit a weak spot found in the line. Defying Al-guns and planes that slaugh-d thousands of them, the eneared to have rammed a
ported that another UN unit fell back nearly 12 miles south, of Chorwon, 18 miles north of the
abated.
In Worcester, Mass., House Republican Leader Joseph W. Martin Jr., Massachusetts, said that public ‘•wrath” over MacArthur's dismissal will “double in its fury” if the administration tries to “smear” the
parallel. Allied spearheads had general.
reached to within a few miles of the defense bastion last week.
On the western flank, close-quarters battle raged with small 8 to 19 miles into Allied arms, automatic weapons and hand to a point east-northeast of grenades. The Reds smashed gong, just a mile inside North across the Injin river near Kor-
angpo, just soujh of the parallel, compilation of front reports during the day yesterday. But ac-th Army headquarters in- tion decreased there during the that elements of seven Chi-!night.
Simultaneously, the Veterans of Foreign Wars called on President Truman to fire Secretary of State Dean Acheson and replace him with a man who can “pave the way for a rebirth obf our bipartisan foreign policy.”
VFW Commander -in - Chief Charles S. Ralls said Acheson has lost the support of the people and has “created only disunity.”
Hale Judges Give Verdicts
Nerves jangled and voices rose in a suspense-filled semi-final round of the Hale Court competition last night in the School of Law auditorium.
Winners of the two-hour semifinals were Bill Dettmar of Santa Monica, UCLA graduate, and Kenneth Lewis, University of Redlands graduate.
“The judges complimented the four attorneys and gave constructive comments that any law student would appreciate,” said Bill Jekel, chairman of the Hale* Court competition.
The decisions wrere handed down by presiding jurist Emett Wilson associate justice of the District Court of Appeal, and Joseph W Vickers and Elsworth Meyers, judges of the Superior Court of Los Angeles county.
The questioning of the black robed judges and replies of quick witted lawyers gave the small audi ence a sampling of the real-life drama enacted in a courtroom.
Tomorrow night Don Mitchel University of Michigan graduate will argue for the plantiff and de fending will be Fred Nicholas, SC School of Journalism, graduate Also on the agenda are Gene Glu-shon, UCLA graduate, and Jerry Pastor, graduate of Ohio State college.
and eye-glasses they get under the speculation in Washington that the National Health plan. But the Con- U. S. may be ready to test a hydro-servatives like this and are ex- gen bomb. It has been 15 months pected to vote for the government, since President Truman announced Bevan bitterly attacked the Unit- the H-bomb project, ed States in a House of Commons1 (The Atomic Energy commission, speech explaining his resignation which last month said that a “ma-as Labor Minister which exploded jor> test program is being carried the long-smouldering leftist rebel- out at Eniwetok, refused to co